I disagree and I'll try to explain. He characterized this as an appeal to both sides of the aisle and as a hopeful start to #MAGA. This is a statement about the act itself, which could be more or less ridiculous depending on the nature of the act that precipitated it. I would further argue that it's a clear celebration of an event that, while positive, should not necessarily be celebrated. In addition, the lengthy discussion that preceded this was precisely a defense of Trump. Lastly, a call to unity is at least an implicit statement that this administration has now shown itself worthy of it.I do not mean to make this about Redux. However, I do think it's important to point out when statements belie one another. I believe that he's not a fan of Trump. What I want to point out is that he's been reacting very favorably and sympathetically. At some point, what's the distinction? I'd like to point out that these sympathies are misplaced, but of course, feel free to agree to disagree.To circle back to the issue, let's take a long view of what happened: Trump has a litany of ethics questions swirling around him and his many promises, many of which turn out to be pretty disingenuous ("blind trust"?). Some people expected this to be true of his salary donation as well, but it wasn't. But because Trump, while being vastly enriched by his presidency, donates $80k of salary to a department to which he has proposed an orders of magnitude greater cut, now is the time to sound the bell for unity? It should not be.And to circle back even further, "people being too unfair about Trump's dishonesties" is probably a far less significant issue than people giving him too much credence.